I personally wouldn't get any because in my opinion, the handling of the Ace fulton Casino cards kind of suck, the orange ones anyway and the point was to make a casino deck ... AND THEY MAKE A GAFF? It kind of destroys the idea of it being a casino deck a deck that there cannot be gaffed. Which is why they had all the " security measures " and they put it as a gaff. Oh D&D you so silly. All this in my opinion, feel free to disagree with me.
D&D were selling red and blue Bee Diamond Backs and Expert at the Card Table decks that were strippers cut to the same guidelines used by a less-than-entirely-honest illegal casino... They had a torrent of complaints, though. Most customers were expecting something like the standard pack of red Bikes, with a really easy-to-grab edge (which unfortunately also makes them easy to see). I snagged the blue and the EATCT but missed out on the red. The edge is cut so fine, the inverted card is practically invisible to the naked eye and it requires a DELICATE touch to extract it from the deck. The only way you can see the inverted card, and only barely at that, is if you lay the deck down on its side edge against a table. I don't think I'd use those for an "oil-and-water" trick.
If I had to guess, I'd say these are easier strippers - easier to use, easier to spot. The "pro-grade" strippers were $20 a pack, no extra plain deck, and these are nearly three bucks cheaper and come in a matched pair of gaffed and ungaffed. I like using the pro-grade strippers when I'm working with someone who's already knowledgeable about stripper decks - he can look all he wants, but he's not going to see that edge.
Instead of wasting your money on a stripper deck, why not just get the regular ace fulton's decks?
http://shop.dananddave.com/ace-fultons-casino-playing-cards-members.html
OK - so how would one go about being a member, since that's a prerequisite for buying this deck...? (I'm not concerned since I've stopped buying D&D decks, but someone else might be interested.)